Poor Management - Anonymous employee LPL Financial Employee Review

2.0
Jun 5, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great coworkers. Since it’s poorly managed team members pitch in and help one another to solve issues. Also it’s something to have on your resume while you search for a career at a better company.

Cons

It’s poorly managed. They do not listen to employee feedback. When employees try to tell management areas of concern managers blame employees for there being problems and disregard all complaints. Management doesn’t care to understand what is really going on and will make changes without realizing how it affects day to day processes. They reduce the workforce as much as possible and make people accountable for too many processes leading to employee burnout. Management regularly leaves their responsibilities for lower level employees to do but do not compensate them for the extra responsibility. There are very few opportunities for advancement. You will not learn much here except how to look for another job. The health insurance could be better and bonuses are a joke, firms are more competitive. They will tell you

Explore other reviews about LPL Financial

5.0
May 27, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

I loved my internship here. It was very immersive and everyone was very kind and supportive. Loved the team I worked with.

Cons

Could have been a bit more to do.

1.0
Jul 2, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Competitive pay — Compensation is solid compared to industry averages. • Pockets of good people — There are teams with genuinely decent, hardworking individuals trying to do the right thing. • Occasional bright spots — A few groups operate professionally despite the broader culture.

Cons

Retaliation everywhere — Speak up and you’re targeted. • Fabricated reviews — Feedback is made up to justify punishment. • Toxic cliques — Closed circles run the place and crush anyone outside them. • Hostile leadership — Belittling and aggression are normalized. • Politics over skill — Competence is irrelevant; alliances decide everything. • Fear‑driven culture — Employees stay silent because retaliation is guaranteed. • Hypocrisy everywhere — You’re excluded, then blamed for not being involved. • Values are a façade — The company talks integrity but operates on intimidation.

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